Miami Herald (Sunday)

Scientists explore using psychedeli­cs to treat alcohol, drug disorders

- BY EMILY ALPERT REYES Los Angeles Times

LOS ANGELES

Melanie Senn’s father, long dead, appeared to her as she lay back in the dimly lit room at the Santa Monica clinic, a mask over her closed eyes, and the psychedeli­c trip began.

More precisely, it was his thumb. It was disembodie­d and huge, materializ­ing in her mind to wipe away her own image. Just as a parent might lick a thumb, she said, and use it to clean the dirtied cheek of a child.

“It wasn’t like an aggressive move,” said

Senn, 51, recounting the experience. Her father’s thumb had appeared right after the word “goodbye” stretched before her, like a banner in the sky.

“It was like, ‘Goodbye. We’re going somewhere else. And you cannot take this version of yourself,’” she recalled.

Her father had died decades earlier after struggling with alcohol use disorder and bouts of homelessne­ss. She didn’t see herself as an alcoholic — it was a word that seemed out of place in her stable life as an educator, wife and mother — but she had begun to think about how much wine she was drinking at night, the sapped energy and headaches she endured by day.

Senn, who lives in San Luis Obispo, said she had signed up for the clinical trial, hours away in Santa Monica, to see whether therapy with psilocybin, the chemical compound in “magic mushrooms” that can cause hallucinat­ions, might change her relationsh­ip to a much more familiar and socially sanctioned drug.

“If my dad had had access to psilocybin treatment,” she had wondered before her trip at the Pacific Neuroscien­ce Institute, “could that have helped him?”

Psilocybin and many other psychedeli­cs are broadly prohibited under federal law, categorize­d by the Drug Enforcemen­t Administra­tion as having “no currently accepted medical use.”

Yet U.S. researcher­s have been legally scrutinizi­ng possible uses of psychedeli­cs in scores of clinical trials approved by the government, addressing their effects on anorexia, migraines and a range of other maladies.

The Food and Drug Administra­tion has deemed psilocybin a potential “breakthrou­gh therapy” for treating depression, a designatio­n that could fast-track the path to new pharmaceut­icals.

Popular interest in psychedeli­cs has been bolstered by the books of Michael Pollan, whose writing inspired Senn to look up psilocybin trials. And money, long the limiting factor in psychedeli­c research, is pouring into the field from corporate investors and intrigued philanthro­pists.

‘‘ I’M NOT A RELIGIOUS PERSON, BUT I TRULY THINK I HAVE NOW BEEN CURED OF MY ATHEISM. SEEING THIS SUBLIME CONNECTION IS MAKING ME FEEL SO MUCH MORE ALIVE THAN DRINKING MYSELF TO SLEEP. Marilyn Senn

Addiction treatment has been one of the most keenly watched areas of psychedeli­cs research in recent years, as studies explore whether they could help people shake off the need for other substances, both legal and illegal.

Early studies have shown promise with treating addiction to tobacco and alcohol. The question has gained urgency as the U.S. faces an overdose surge that is killing more than 100,000 people annually, the majority linked to opioids, and a spike in deaths tied directly to alcohol, which have hit their highest rate in decades.

Peter Hendricks, a public health professor at the University of Alabama Birmingham, said cocaine users have asked skepticall­y, “You’re going to help me stop getting high — by getting me high?” He is studying whether psychedeli­cs paired with therapy could ease cocaine dependency.

 ?? GENARO MOLINA TNS ?? Psychother­apist Karina Sergi, left, talks with Melanie Senn, who prepares for a psilocybin session at the Pacific Neuroscien­ce Institute in Santa Monica.
GENARO MOLINA TNS Psychother­apist Karina Sergi, left, talks with Melanie Senn, who prepares for a psilocybin session at the Pacific Neuroscien­ce Institute in Santa Monica.

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